Hemp, plant of the
genus Cannabis (family Cannabaceae) that is cultivated for its fiber (bast fiber)
or its seeds, which contain about 30 percent oil and may be eaten. Hemp is
sometimes confused with the cannabis plants that serve as sources of the drug
marijuana and the drug preparation hashish. All three products (hemp,
marijuana, and hashish) contain tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), a compound that
produces psychoactive effects in humans. However, cannabis cultivated for hemp
has only small amounts of THC relative to that grown for the production of
marijuana or hashish.
Hemp originated in
Central Asia. Hemp cultivation for fiber was recorded in China as early as 2800
bce and was practiced in the Mediterranean countries of Europe early in the
Christian era, spreading throughout the rest of Europe during the Middle Ages.
It was planted in Chile in the 1500s and a century later in North America.
Hemp is grown in
temperate zones as an annual cultivated from seed and can reach a height of up
to 16 feet (5 meters). Crops grow best in sandy loam with good drainage and
require average monthly rainfall of at least 2.5 inches (65 mm) throughout the
growing season. Crops cultivated for fiber are densely sowed and produce plants
averaging 6 to 10 feet (2 to 3 meters) tall with almost no branching. Plants
grown for oilseed are planted farther apart and are shorter and many-branched.
The slender stalks are hollow except at the tip and base. The leaves are
compound with palmate shape, and the flowers are small and greenish yellow.
Seed-producing flowers form elongate, spike like clusters growing on the pistillate,
or female, plants; pollen-producing flowers form many-branched clusters on
staminate, or male, plants. Maximum yield and quality are obtained by
harvesting soon after the plants reach maturity, indicated by the full blossoms
and freely shedding pollen of the male plants. Although sometimes pulled up by
hand, plants are more often cut off about 1 inch (2 to 3 cm) above the ground.
Fibers are obtained by
subjecting the stalks to a series of operations—including retting, drying, and
crushing—and a shaking process that completes separation from the woody
portion, releasing the long, fairly straight fibre, or line. The fibre strands,
usually over 5.8 feet (1.8 metres) long, are made of individual cylindrical
cells with an irregular surface. The fibre, longer and less flexible than flax,
is usually yellowish, greenish, or a dark brown or gray and, because it is not
easily bleached to sufficiently light shades, is rarely dyed. It is strong and
durable and is used for cordage—e.g., twine, yarn, rope, cable, and string—and
for artificial sponges and such coarse fabrics as sacking (burlap) and canvas.
In Italy some hemp receives special processing, producing whitish color and
attractive lustre, and is used to make fabric similar to linen. Other plant
fibres used for cordage have been incorrectly called hemp, but only the hemp
plant yields true hemp.
Leading producers of
hemp fibre include India, Romania, China, Hungary, Poland, and Turkey. The
largest importers are Italy, the United Kingdom, Belgium, Germany, and France.
The oil obtained from
hempseed can be used to make paints, varnishes, soaps, and edible oil, but the
seed’s chief commercial use has been for caged-bird feed.
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